Royal Mail stamp collection |
The 48p
stamp shows Elizabeth Garrett Anderson (1836-1917). Like her younger sister
Millicent Garrett Fawcett, she was determined to surmount gender barriers and decided to become
a doctor. At that time, medicine was still an all male preserve, and she was
turned down by all medical schools she applied to. She therefore studied
privately and became the first woman to gain a medical qualification in
Britain. She began working with poor women at what later became London’s NewHospital for women, where she installed the London School of Medicine forWomen.
The 50p
stamp shows Marie Stopes (1880-1958). She opened the first family planning
clinic in London in 1921, and wrote Britain’s first sex manual. She is better
remembered as a racist Nazi bigot, who’s view on eugenics not only coincided
with the views held in Nazi Germany, but made her a passionate admirer of
Hitler sending him a love letter and a book of poems. She campaigned to have
the poor, the sick and people of mixed race sterilized. The inclusion of such a
person who was an advocate for Nazi eugenics (selective breeding) and a racist
to boot is quite incomprehensible.
The 56p
stamp shows Eleanor Rathbone (1872-1946). She was one of the first women to win
a seat in the Commons. She was the chief campaigner behind the FamilyAllowances Act in 1945 and crucial to its passing into law. She warned early
against Hitler and was militantly anti-Nazi. Somehow the perfect fit with the
50p stamp.
The 72p
stamp shows Claudia Jones (1915-1964). Born in Trinidad, she moved with her
parents to New York at the age of eight, where they lived in poverty in Harlem.
As a Communist and an activist for civil rights, she was one of many political
prisoners in the United States and was deported in 1955. Receiving asylum in
Britain and after the race riots of 1958, she helped set up Notting HillCarnival which showcases Afro-Caribbean talent and culture.
The 81p
stamp shows Barbara Castle (1910-2002). Secretary in the Wilson government, she
was one of the main supporters of the Equal Pay Act of 1970 which prohibits
less favorable pay and conditions for women. Her plan to break the power of
the unions on the other hand was a mitigated disaster.
The 1£
stamp shows Millicent Garrett Fawcett (1847-1929). As President of the NationalUnion of Women’s Suffrage Society she was a tireless worker for the right for
women to vote. Unlike Emmeline Pankhurst who advocated violent confrontation,
Millicent Garrett Fawcett preferred a conciliatory approach. It was due to her that women were granted
vote in 1918.
Where
five of these women might be controversial choices, the Royal Mail has been
roundly and universally condemned for the inclusion of the Nazi supporter
Marie Stopes. If you are a stamp collector, you should get these stamps early,
because with this entire fracas going on it is even possible that the stamp or
the series will be put out of circulation.
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